Supreme Court Fellows Begin 2015-2016 Term

Four Supreme Court Fellows have begun their 2015-2016 fellowships in the federal Judiciary.

Amelia Yowell, who comes to the Fellows Program from a clerkship with Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Mary H. Murguia, is assigned to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. 

Debra A. Perlin, previously a justice advisor in the Office of Criminal Assistance Partnerships Justice Team, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, is assigned to the Supreme Court’s Office of the Counselor to the Chief Justice.

Pro Se Centers Help Even the Odds for Litigants Without Lawyers

When litigants come to federal court without a lawyer, they are at a disadvantage. Even if their case is strong, they can easily get lost in a maze of procedural rules and arcane terminology. A single error can doom their chances, long before a trial date is set. In the U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, that is changing. Since late March, an innovative program has provided critical legal help to more than 150 low-income pro se litigants—people who must, usually for financial reasons, file or defend a civil lawsuit without a lawyer.

Court Takes Direct Hit From Typhoon Soudelor

The last week of July, Gregg Miller traveled from the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts’ Washington, DC office to Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands for planning meetings on a local courthouse project. He was just in time to ride out in his hotel his first typhoon.